In the US, 49% of C-suite leaders say they have a sustainability strategy that has been acted upon and clearly communicated—in line with global trends (43%).
Percent indicating there is a sustainability strategy in place that has been acted upon and clearly communicated
A further 69% say their CEO is personally committed to advancing sustainability and organizational progress has been made, ahead of the global average (51%). Notably, employees are less optimistic about the maturity of their organization’s sustainability efforts and their CEO's commitment to the cause.
Percent indicating the CEO is personally committed to advancing sustainability and organizational progress has been made
Looking ahead, US C-suite leaders are bullish about the advancement of their sustainability mission: 55% expect to make significant progress/a great deal of progress towards embedding sustainability across strategy and operations in the next five years—ahead of the global average (39%).
Yet there are also indications that business leaders are at the early stages of their understanding of the value that sustainability can unlock—both for their organizations and the communities in which they operate. When asked why they were embarking on sustainability action, 46% of US C-suite leaders cited brand management concerns—they wanted to be seen as socially responsible or reputable and use sustainability for competitive differentiation. By comparison, just 18% say value creation sets the agenda.
A brand-first approach is problematic because it is unlikely to lead to the transformation that is required to thrive in a new era of stakeholder capitalism. When leaders only see sustainability as a bolt-on to existing strategy, rather than a fundamental driver of business growth and value creation, they will not commit to making difficult decisions or set aside the necessary resources and capital to drive deep change to business and operational models.
5-Year Outlook
A great deal / significant progress
There is a significant opportunity for leaders to challenge prevailing assumptions about the value of sustainability to their business. Our global research shows that when value creation is the motivating force behind sustainability action, organizations achieve much more, much faster.
Percent indicating great deal / significant progress
Leaders who see sustainability as a tool to unlock value for people, planet and profit, rather than a threat to be managed, will make the biggest strides forward in the years ahead.
Action Items
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Explore the "Divides and Dividends" survey themes
Do business leaders and employees agree on the top sustainability issues affecting the future of society and their workplace?
How does the US compare to its global peers when it comes to accelerating sustainability action?
Next-generation leaders are a critical cohort in advancing the sustainability agenda. Are US organizations investing enough in their future executives?
Do business leaders have the skills they need to pivot their organizations to a more sustainable—and profitable—future?